814-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 6,1986 Baronners Set Standard For Local Produce BY MARGIE FUSCO Cambria Co. Correspondent HOLLIDAYSBURG - Bill Baronner helped to put the nine Kovach kids through college and trade schools. He’s done the same for two generations of Kellys, close to three dozen youngsters, not to mention countless others in Blair County. How? Through summer jobs at his produce stand. Since 1949, Baronner’s stand in Hollidaysburg has set a hallmark for local produce. Today, from the unimposing wooden front on the concrete-and-brick building, Bill Baronner and his son Bobby know they can sell almost 4,500 dozen ears of sweet corn a day, in season. From the fields behind the stand, they can anticipate moving as many as 4,000 quarts of strawberries daily, about 70 percent of which are pick-your own. The Baronner produce station tradition began in 1918 when Bill’s father began selling wholesale produce. The Baronners intended to stay in wholesaling, but after the end of World War 11, the profit margin began to fall. “Chain stores were attracting buyers and they were dictating prices,” Bill recalls. As an alternative one year, the Baronners erected a modest building with an apartment above and decided to try a roadside stand. The stand has been open from the start of strawberry season until Halloween every year since. Although com and strawberries are the main attractions, people who stop at the stand in Hollidaysburg near the State Police barracks can expect to find head lettuce, spinach, snap peas, sugar peas, wax and snap beans, broccoli, squash, cantaloupe, cauliflower, seedless watermelon, tomatoes, eggplant, cale, beets, peppers, late cabbage and pump kins. To supplement the offerings, Baronner’s purchase green onions, plums, peaches, apples, pears, and potatoes (from local growers whenever possible) to sell in their market. The key to Baronner’s success can be traced to quality. This reporter can tell about it first hand. Not only have I tested the plump, sugary ears of corn... I’m married to a former crew boss, one of the nine Kovaches who worked a dozen summers in Baronner’s fields and at the stand. There are standards set at Baronner’s that most produce sellers would be hard-pressed to match. “We don’t pass off any wormy com here,” Bill says. To be sure of that fields are sprayed every three days and soil is fumigated. Picking standards are also tight. Bill has been known to throw out entire wagonloads of com that was picked a few hours too soon or too late. “The com has to have just the right plumpness, that pearly color that tells you the sugar is at its peak,” former crew boss Dennis Kovach explains. To keep that com at its peak, what doesn’t sell immediately from the yield is <9^^^^9pHp This attractive building houses Baronner’s Market, which draws customers from several surrounding counties. .1 Bill Baronner spends most of the time in the market while his son Bobby manages the fields. Customers can select from a wide variety of top quality produce. kept under a shower of cool water. When strawberries are picked for sale in the market, they’re graded carefully. People shopping at the stand know they won’t find any white-tipped or orange berries hidden at the bottom of a basket. The procedure is the same with all the vegetables that come in from the fields; each item is graded by hand, and every questionable piece is discarded. Bobby Baronner admits sometimes the emphasis on quality can get in the way. He likes to tell about the crew member he had to remove from the pick-your-own fields because the man intimidated people by grading their strawberries, throwing out over or under-ripe berries, and making the people go back and start again. But the reputation for quality has made Baronner’s stand a stopping place for people from several counties around. Baron ner’s strawberries have even "nn attracted the attention of a famous out-of-state visitor. When former President Jimmy Carter was visiting on the Harp ster farms in Centre County this past June, it was Baronner’s strawberries that graced the table. Bill is modest about the honor, saying, “Old Mr. Harpster used to love one kind of strawberries we grew here, and he got into the habit of calling on us when he wanted some. I guess the rest of the family just kind of picked up on it.” A director of the Pennsylvania Vegetable Growers Association, Bill Baronner is interested in new crop varieties. “This year we’re trying out about 20 new varieties. There are only two we’re con sidering to plant next year, and that’s about average.” He admits there’s some risk in trying new varieties. “You have to try them out for several years. For example, last year we had a real disaster with a cantaloupe variety that was great the year before. One year isn’t going to tell you all you need to know.” He keeps about 90 acres of his land planted in sweet corn, about 70 percent of which is bi-color and white. He has 14 acres of strawberries, primarily in Early Clio and All-Star, in 10-inch raised beds with tile drains in the fields. He owns about 275 acres and rents an additional 60. Much of it is fertile bottom land along tne banks of the Little Juniata River and Canoe Creek. He keeps only about 175 acres in production at a time. When autumn comes and the stand closes down, Bill likes to take some time for hunting. He’s been as far away as Alaska for Dahl sheep and Canada for moose. He (Turn to Page B 16) See your nearest I\EW HOLLAIND Dealer for Dependable Equipment and Dependable Service: Annville, PA BHM Farm Equipment, Inc RD 1 717-867-2211 Beavertown, PA B&R Farm Equipment, Inc RD 1, Box 217 A 717-658-7024 Belleville, PA Ivan J Zook Farm Equipment Belleville, Pa 717 935-2948 Canton, PA Hess Farm Equipment 717-673-5143 Carlisle, PA Paul Shovers, Inc 35 East Willow Street 717 243 2686 Chambersburg, PA Clugston Implement Inc RD 1 717-263 4103 Davidsburg, PA George N Gross, Inc R D 2, Dover, PA 717 292 1673 Elizabethtown, PA Messick Farm Equipment, Inc Rt 283 Rheem’s Exit 717 367 1319 Everett. PA C Paul Ford & Son RD 1 814 652 2051 Gettysburg. PA Yinglmg Implements R D 9 717 359-4848 Greencastle. PA Meyers Implement’s Inc 400 N Antrim Way PO Box 97 717-597-2176 Halifax, PA Sweigard Bros R D 3, Box 13 717-896-3414 Hamburg. PA Shartlesville Farm Service RD 1,80x1392 215-488-1025 Hanover, PA Sheets Brothers, Inc 1061 Carlisle St Hanover PA 17331 717 632 3660 Honey Brook. PA Dependable Motor Co East Mam Street 215 273-3131 215 273 3737 Honey Grove, PA Norman D Clark & Son Inc Honey Grove PA 71/ 734 3682 Hughesville. PA Farnsworth Farm Supplies Inc 103 Cemetery Street 717 584 2106 Lancaster. PA L H Brubaker Inc 350 Strasburg Pike 717 397 5179 Lebanon, PA Keller Bros Tractor Co RD 7, Box 405 717-949-6501 Lititz, PA Roy A Brubaker 700 Woodcrest Av 717-626-7766 Loysville, PA PaulShovers Inc Loysville, PA 717-789-3117 Lynnport. PA KermitK Kistler, Inc Lynnport, PA 215 298-2011 Mill Hall. PA Paul A Dotterer RD 1 717 726-3471 New Holland, PA ABC Groff Inc 110 South Railroad 717 354 4191 New Park, PA M&R Equipment Inc PO Box 16 717 993 2511 Oley, PA C J Wonsidler Bros RD 2 215 987 6257 Pitman, PA Marlin W Schreffler Pitman, PA 717 648 1120 Quakertown, PA C J Wonsidler Bros RD 1 215 536 1935 Quarryville, PA C E Wiley & Son, Inc 101 South Lime Street 717 786 2895 Rmgtown, PA Rmgtown Farm Equipment Rmgtown, PA 717-889-3184 Tamaqua, PA Charles S Snyder Inc R D 3 717-386 5954 West Grove, PA S G Lewis & Son, Inc RD 2, 80x66 215 869-2214 Churchville, MD Walter G Coale, Inc 2849-53 Churchville Rd 301 734 7722 Frederick, MD New Holland, Inc Rt 26 East 301-662 4197 Outside MD 800 331 9122 Westminster, MD New Holland Inc 1201 New Windsor Rd 301 857 0711 Outside MD 800 331 9122 Washington, NJ Frank Rymon & Sons 201 689 1464 Woodstown, NJ Owen Supply Co Broad Street & East Avenue 609 769 0308